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Default processing of event sequences.

Alicia Hymel1, Daniel T Levin1, Lewis J Baker1

  • 1Department of Psychology and Human Development, Vanderbilt University.

Journal of Experimental Psychology. Human Perception and Performance
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PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Viewers struggle to detect out-of-order events in visual sequences, especially when multitasking. Our findings suggest event sequence perception isn't automatic and requires focused attention.

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Area of Science:

  • Cognitive Psychology
  • Visual Perception
  • Event Sequence Encoding

Background:

  • Event sequence perception is crucial for learning and prediction.
  • Previous research may overestimate awareness of event sequences due to resource demands.
  • Viewer awareness of specific event sequences is not consistently tested.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate viewers' ability to detect anomalies in visual event sequences.
  • To determine if participants can identify out-of-order actions within videos.
  • To assess the impact of secondary tasks on sequence anomaly detection.

Main Methods:

  • Participants viewed videos with and without misordered actions.
  • Detection accuracy for out-of-order events was measured.
  • Performance was assessed under single-task and dual-task conditions.
  • An incidental learning task was also employed.

Main Results:

  • Participants frequently failed to detect misordered events.
  • Performance significantly declined when participants performed a secondary task.
  • Misorderings were rarely detected in the incidental task.
  • Detection improved when videos concluded immediately after the anomaly.

Conclusions:

  • Viewers perceive event elements but do not automatically monitor sequence expectations.
  • Detecting event sequence anomalies requires specific task demands and focused attention.
  • Implicit sequence awareness is limited unless explicitly probed.